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Thugosaurus_Rex @ Thugosaurus_Rex @beehaw.org Posts 0Comments 25Joined 2 yr. ago
I'd be interested as well, and it's actually a bit of an open question in the US even whether an emoji can satisfy Statute of Frauds requirements. Not every contract needs to be in writing, but the Statute of Frauds requires that certain types of contracts do need to have a written contract and agreement--sale of goods valued more than $500.00 is one of those categories. Canada has its own various Statute of Frauds laws, but that's way outside of my jurisdiction, and I can't tell from the reporting whether any applied or were considered in this case.
Emojis are the focus of more and more litigation these days, and it's really interesting watching how these cases play out. Here's a good source (US focused) from Lexis Nexis discussing emojis in contract litigation:
I'm a lawyer (though admittedly not in Canada!)--this doesn't sound as absurd as the headlines read, and I would hesitate to to form opinions on any case on the basis of headlines or blurbs. That said, looking at other sources it seems there's more here than the posted article conveys:
The judge noted that Mr. Achter and Mr. Mickleborough had had a longstanding business relationship and that, in the past, when Mr. Mr. Mickleborough had texted Mr. Achter contracts for durum wheat, Mr. Achter had responded by succinctly texting “looks good,” “ok” or “yup.”
Both parties clearly understood these terse responses were meant to be confirmation of the contract and “not a mere acknowledgment of the receipt of the contract” by Mr. Achter, wrote Justice T.J. Keene of the Court of King’s Bench for Saskatchewan. And each time, Mr. Achter had delivered the grain as contracted and had been paid.
Looks like they had a long standing business relationship where this sort of communication had been the common understood form of acceptance in the past. It's also important to note the guy only tried backing out of the deal after a price fluctuation meant he'd be taking a relative loss.
I'd want to see all of the facts and arguments, but this seems reasonable from what we can see reported.
In Legend of Dragoon I hit a wall on a Disc 2 boss and was stuck for months. After I took a break and came back I realized you could change your equipment--I'd never upgraded anything equipped and was using all of the starting equipped weapons and armor. This was not my first RPG, nor was I young enough to use age as an excuse.
This works for things I'm explicitly interested in seeking out, but one thing I use this type of social media for is finding entirely new things that before scrolling past I didn't even know were things, or wouldn't otherwise seek out on my own or even know to look for. I don't have any objection to porn, but I also don't want to be scrolling past it on my phone with my kids around, even if it's blurred or minimized. Having to block each individual community as it pops up isn't feasable--being able to block by server (like a general block on lemmynsfw) would make general use so much easier.
The Rock Band series is my GOAT and probably the best party game of all time. The series on its own is fantastic--who doesn't want to jam out? But add a few other people and it's in a whole different league. I was living in the dorms when it came out. A lot of days we'd start it up and leave our door open and let people cycle in and out between classes or whatever else was going on through the days. We don't know you? You don't know us? Nobody gives a shit--we need someone on drums.
We eventually had several hundred songs through the games and DLC--just about any type of music someone might want to play. The equipment isn't made anymore to my knowledge and I don't think there's any way to get it other than second hand, but when it was at ots height the series was the high water mark of social gaming. It also served as a stepping stone to actual musical pursuits--I eventually picked up an electronic drum kit and started playing (very poorly) for real.